Wilfrid’s Monastery at Ripon
As well as its main church dedicated to
Saint Peter, Wilfrid’s
monastery must have had buildings in which the monks could sleep,
eat and carry out the monastic routines. No certain traces of any
have yet been found, although some trenches and gullies glimpsed
just north-east of the cathedral might be parts of them. The only
other feature of Wilfrid’s monastery which we know of was
a burial ground on Ailcy Hill, the prominent natural mound 200m
due east of the Cathedral.
Other Anglo-Saxon remains found near the Cathedral include fragments
of 8th or 9th century carved stone crosses. Uncovered west of St
Marygate near foundations of a later chapel, the Ladykirk, they
indicate a second monastic burial ground. Discoveries of skeletons
on All Hallows Hill may suggest another Anglo-Saxon focus, and
the tradition that the Celtic monastery occupied land at Priest
Lane may also have a basis in ancient discoveries, now themselves
forgotten.
In 1228 the boundary of church lands included
Ailcy Hill, Priest Lane and All Hallows Hill. Taken together
these finds and traditions
hint that Wilfrid’s monastery occupied a large area to the
north and east of the Cathedral, as well as land to the south and
west where many of the later medieval and modern buildings of the
Cathedral precinct are to be found.
Wilfrid’s monastery eventually came into the hands of successive
Archbishops of York. As they managed to keep on good terms with
the Viking kings of Northumbria in the 9th and 10th centuries,
the monastery may have survived this dangerous era. Sculpture,
burials and coins of this period have all been found near the Cathedral.
In 948, as a warning to the Archbishop of York, the English king
burned the church at Ripon. How much damage was done isn’t
known but worship was soon resumed. Saint Cuthbert’s relics
were brought here briefly in 995, and Domesday Book records a group
of priests at Ripon in 1066. It is even possible that the core
of Wilfrid’s church stood until the 1170s when Archbishop
Roger of York began to build the church which still stands today.